The Reporter (Vacaville)

Fire crews close in around massive New Mexico wildfire

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LAS VEGAS, N.M. >> Firefighte­rs in New Mexico took advantage of diminished winds Thursday to build more fire lines and clear combustibl­e brush near homes close to the fringes of the largest wildfire burning in the U.S.

They did so ahead of what is expected to be several consecutiv­e days of intense hot, dry and extremely windy weather that could fan the blaze.

The fire has marched across 258 square miles of high alpine forest and grasslands at the southern tip of the Rocky Mountains, destroying dozens of homes and prompting evacuation­s for thousands of families, many of whom have called the Sangre de Cristo Mountains home since their Spanish ancestors first settled the region centuries ago.

President Joe Biden approved a disaster declaratio­n that brings new financial resources to the areas devastated by fire since early April. The aid includes grants for temporary housing and low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses and other relief programs for people and businesses.

The start of the conflagrat­ion has been traced in part to a preventive fire initiated by the U.S. Forest Service to reduce flammable vegetation. The blaze escaped control, merging with another wildfire of unknown origin.

U.S. Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández on Thursday pressed a top Forest Service official to fully investigat­e the decision to start the “controlled burn” and disclose whether the agency considered the effects of climate change and a megadrough­t afflicting western states.

“What protocols or controls were in place to make sure a controlled burn does

not get out of hand? Did the U.S. Forest Service follow these protocols,” the congresswo­man wrote to Forest Service Chief Randy Moore.

Evacuation­s that have lasted weeks have taken a physical and emotional toll on residents. Classes were canceled at area schools for the week, some businesses in the small northeaste­rn city of Las Vegas have closed due to staff shortages and some customers of the electric cooperativ­e that serves surroundin­g areas have had no power for weeks.

San Miguel County Sheriff Chris Lopez said firetrucks, a fleet of aircraft and other equipment have been brought in to the area to corral the flames and “we're ready for anything that does come.”

But it's still too soon to let people return to outlying areas that burned earlier because there are pockets of unburned brush and trees that can serve as fuel for the blaze within the fire's perimeter.

“We've come to this crossroads on a few different occasions, where we were feeling good about it and we come up to a wind event and it hasn't went as planned,” Lopez said.

Relatively calm and cool weather in recent days has helped firefighte­rs to keep the fire in check around its shifting fronts.

Bulldozers scraped more fire lines Thursday while crews conducted controlled burning to to clear vegetation and prevent it from igniting.

 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES — THE ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL ?? Smoke rises from wildfires near Las Vegas, N.M., on Wednesday.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES — THE ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL Smoke rises from wildfires near Las Vegas, N.M., on Wednesday.

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